EP0666658A1 - An optical regenerator and an optical transmission system - Google Patents

An optical regenerator and an optical transmission system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
EP0666658A1
EP0666658A1 EP95101587A EP95101587A EP0666658A1 EP 0666658 A1 EP0666658 A1 EP 0666658A1 EP 95101587 A EP95101587 A EP 95101587A EP 95101587 A EP95101587 A EP 95101587A EP 0666658 A1 EP0666658 A1 EP 0666658A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
clock
transmission
signal
optical
receiving
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
EP95101587A
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Other versions
EP0666658B1 (en
Inventor
Ryoji Takeyari
Takashi Funada
Yukihiko Wakai
Kazuo Hagimoto
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Hitachi Ltd
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp
Original Assignee
Hitachi Ltd
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Hitachi Ltd, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp filed Critical Hitachi Ltd
Publication of EP0666658A1 publication Critical patent/EP0666658A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of EP0666658B1 publication Critical patent/EP0666658B1/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B10/00Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
    • H04B10/29Repeaters
    • H04B10/291Repeaters in which processing or amplification is carried out without conversion of the main signal from optical form
    • H04B10/299Signal waveform processing, e.g. reshaping or retiming
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B10/00Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
    • H04B10/25Arrangements specific to fibre transmission
    • H04B10/2507Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion
    • H04B10/2537Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion due to scattering processes, e.g. Raman or Brillouin scattering
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B10/00Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
    • H04B10/29Repeaters
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L7/00Arrangements for synchronising receiver with transmitter
    • H04L7/02Speed or phase control by the received code signals, the signals containing no special synchronisation information
    • H04L7/027Speed or phase control by the received code signals, the signals containing no special synchronisation information extracting the synchronising or clock signal from the received signal spectrum, e.g. by using a resonant or bandpass circuit

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to an optical regenerator and an optical transmission system for multi-repeater optical transmission, or more in particular to a high-quality optical transmission technique employing a measure against what is called the stimulated Brillouin scattering in order to produce a high launch power.
  • SBS stimulated Brillouin scattering
  • an object of the present invention to provide an optical transmission system that can transmit an optical transmission signal with high power.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide an optical regenerator suitable for the optical transmission system repeated by a plurality of regenerators.
  • SBS can be suppressed by modulating the phase or frequency of the signal input to the optical fiber to be the phase uncontinuously.
  • the input signal to an end of the optical fiber i.e., the frequency of the output signal of a repeater is different, however, the time of arrival of the signal at the other end of the optical fiber is diverged due to the wavelength dispersion of the optical fiber, with the result that a jitter appears in the signal waveform at the other end.
  • reference numeral 1 designates an anti-SBS transmitter including a semiconductor laser 9 as a CW light source which emits at 1.3 ⁇ m or 1.5 ⁇ m drived by a predetermined magnitude of current.
  • Numeral 8 designates a amplitude modulator for frequency-modulating with a sinusoidal wave (several kHz to several MHz) the predetermined current applied to the semiconductor laser.
  • the output phase or frequency of the semiconductor laser 9 is modulated, thereby generating a carrier signal which has a uncontinuous phase capable of suppressing SBS.
  • the output amplitude of the semiconductor laser is also modulated. This amplitude modulation, however, is negligibly small.
  • the amplitude of this carrier signal is modulated in accordance with the data signal by an external modulator 10 and makes up an optical transmission signal.
  • an external modulator 10 When a signal with a discrete phase is applied to an optical fiber 11, the output waveform of the optical fiber contains a jitter for the reason described above. The observed frequency of the jitter coincides with the frequency of the frequency modulator 8.
  • the frequency modulator 8 may be eliminated and the phase of the output of the laser 9 may be modulated directly using a phase modulator 100 to suppress the jitter.
  • a received signal containing the jitter is logically decided at edge of the clock pulse extracted from the received signal and then transmitted as an optical signal (by regeneration repeating).
  • the modulation frequency of the anti-SBS frequency modulation is assumed to be fSBS, and the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function for a clock extraction device to be fC1.
  • the configuration with the relation fSBS ⁇ fC1 held is shown in Fig.3A, the jitter transfer function for the clock extraction device 4' in Fig. 4A. Since the jitter frequency fSBS of the receive signal is lower than the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function, the clock phase extracted by the clock extraction device 4' follows the jitter of the data.
  • the data phase coincides with the clock phase at a decision block 5, and therefore no logical error of the data is caused due to the jitter.
  • the jitter on input side passes through the optical regenerator 20 and appears in a similar form in the optical intensity waveform on the output side.
  • the frequency modulation for SBS suppression is required to be performed for each optical regenerator. After transmission through the optical fiber 11, therefore, the frequency modulation is converted into a jitter by wavelength dispersion, resulting in an increased jitter. In this way, when fSBS is smaller than fC1, the problem is that the jitter is accumulated during the multi-repeater transmission.
  • the configuration for the relation fSBS > fC1 held is shown in Fig.3B, and the jitter transfer function for the clock extraction device 4'' in Fig. 4B.
  • the clock extraction device 4'' suppresses the jitter of frequency fSBS. No jitter by anti-SBS frequency modulation, therefore, appears on the output. Since the clock extracted the clock extraction device 4'' fails to follow the data jitter, therefore, an error occurs between the clock phase and the data phase at the decision block 5, which is likely to cause a logic error of the data.
  • an optical regenerator in which an optical transmission signal frequency-modulated by which phase of the signal changes to suppress the SBS and further intensity-modulated by data is transmitted as an optical output, the optical regenerator having two functions of clock extraction for decision the received signal and clock regeneration for a transmission clock.
  • the optical regenerator having two functions of clock extraction for decision the received signal and clock regeneration for a transmission clock.
  • an optical regenerator comprising a first clock extraction device 4' for decision the received signal and a second clock extraction device 4'' for regenerating the transmission clock, wherein the relation holds that fC2 ⁇ fSBS ⁇ fC1, where fSBS is the modulation frequency for frequency modulation of the optical transmission signal, fC1 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function of the first clock extraction device 4', and fC2 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function for the second clock extraction device 4''.
  • first clock extraction device 4' and the second clock extraction device 4'' are cascaded as shown in Fig. 5.
  • the first clock extraction device 4' follows the input and the second clock attraction device 4'' can easily suppress the jitter through the extraction devices 4'.
  • This configuration is desirable as the jitter tolerance and the jitter transfer characteristic can be improved simultaneously.
  • a multi-repeater optical transmission system for transmitting an optical transmission signal frequency-modulated and further intensity-modulated by data as an optical output, in which the optical transmission signal of the transmitter is frequency-modulated with frequency fSBS, a corresponding repeating receiver includes a first clock extraction device 4' for decision the received signal and a second clock extraction device 4'' for regenerating the transmission clock as a clock for transmission data, as shown in Fig.
  • the relation fSBS ⁇ fC1 causes the phase of the input clock to the decision block to follow the phase of the input data and therefore no error occurs.
  • the transmission clock holds the relation fC2 ⁇ fSBS
  • the frequency component of jitter for anti-SBS frequency modulation is suppressed, and therefore jitters are not added independently or accumulated at the time of multiple repeating operations. In this way, the present invention is provided to solve the two problems of jitter and the logical error due to the input jitter at the same time.
  • the anti-SBS transmitter shown in Fig. 2 is used.
  • the instanteneous frequency corresponding to the modulation frequency fSBS has a certain bandwidth.
  • FIG. 5 An example configuration of an optical regenerator according to a first embodiment is shown in Fig.5.
  • Numeral 40 designates an optical regenerator unit, numeral 2 a photodiode, numeral 3 an equalizing amplifier, and numeral 4' a first clock extraction device.
  • the clock extraction device which includes such functions as nonlinear extraction, is represented by a tank circuit related to the jitter characteristic.
  • Numeral 5 designates a decision block numeral 6 a digital signal processing section for data processing required for regenerator, numeral 7 a D-FF (D-type flip-flop), and numeral 4'' a second clock extraction device.
  • the clock supply for driving the digital processing section 6 is not shown as it is not important in terms of configuration.
  • the D-FF 7, which indicates that the phase (timing) of the output data is determined by the clock supplied from the clock extraction device 4'', may be included in the digital processing section 6 depending on the particular configuration.
  • Numeral 8 designates a amplitude modulation oscillator for frequency modulation suppressing SBS, numeral 9 a semiconductor laser, and numeral 10 an external modulator.
  • the received optical signal through dispersive optical fiber contains a jitter according to the principle shown in Fig. 1.
  • This received optical signal is converted into a current by the photodiode 2, amplified by the equalizing amplifier 3, and then is distributed between the decision block 5 and the first clock extraction device 4'.
  • the first clock extraction device 4' which generally includes a nonlinear extractor, for example, full-wave rectifier, a tank circuit and a limitting amplifier, may alternatively use a PLL.
  • fSBS ⁇ fC1 where fC1 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function.
  • fB is the transmission bit rate.
  • the clock recoverd at the clock extraction device 4' is supplied as a timing signal for logic decision on the equalizing amplification signal to the decision block 5 on the one hand and is applied to the second clock extraction device 4" at the same time.
  • fSBS ⁇ fC1 the jitter of frequency fSBS passes through the clock extraction device 4'.
  • the clock supplied to the clock extraction device 4' follows the jitter of the equalizing amplification signal applied to the decision block 5. There occurs, therefore, no logic error of data which otherwise might be caused by the jitter generated for SBS suppression.
  • the clock extraction device 4'' is for removing the jitter of the clock recoverd at the clock extraction device 4', and includes a tank circuit alone or a PLL.
  • the clock extraction device 4'' is input the clock including the jitter of frequency fSBS, and in order to suppress this jitter, the relation is held fC2 ⁇ fSBS.
  • the transmission data is output syncronized with the clock regenerated at the clock extraction device 4'' using the D-FF 7. As a consequence, the jitter of frequency fSBS input to the optical repeater 40 is removed from the output. Also, no logic error of data occurs which otherwise might be caused by the jitter of frequency fSBS.
  • the object of the invention is achieved by establishing the relation fC2 ⁇ fSBS ⁇ fC1, where fSBS is the frequency-modulating frequency fSBS for SBS suppression, fC1 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function for the first clock extraction device, and fC2 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function for the second clock extraction device.
  • the difference between fC1 and fSBS which may be small, is preferably about one order of magnitude considering a margin.
  • the difference between fSBS and fC2 should preferably be one order of magnitude.
  • fSBS is set to 10 kHz to 1 MHz, fC1 to 3 MHz to 10 MHz, and fC2 to 1 kHz to 0.1 MHz for 10 Gb/s transmission.
  • the semi-conductor laser 9 for SBS suppression is frequency-modulated with a sinusoidal wave.
  • fC2 the frequency modulation with other than a sinusoidal wave or by the phase modulation instead of frequency modulation as far as fC2 is set to less than the lower limit (fSBSL) of the spectrum of the modulation signal and fC1 to more than the upper limit (fSBSH) of the spectrum of the modulation signal.
  • a repeater 50 according to another embodiment for 10 Gb/s optical regenerate is shown in Fig. 6.
  • the component parts which perform the same operation as the corresponding parts in Fig. 5 are designated by the same reference numerals respectively and will not be fully described.
  • a first clock extraction device 54' like the first clock extraction device 4' of Fig. 5, is for recovering the clock in order not to cause any logic error due to jitters.
  • the first clock extraction device 54' includes a full-wave rectifier 61, a tank circuit 62 and a limitting amplifier 63.
  • the transmission optical signal is converted into a first electrical signal at a photodiode 2, which first electrical signal is amplified at an amplifier 3 and is distributed between the first clock extraction device 54' and the decision block 5.
  • the first clock extraction device 54' recovers the clock signal 80 (10 GHz) on the basis of the first electrical signal distributed.
  • the clock signal 80 is divided to 1/16 in frequency by a demultiplexer 51, and after being further reduced to 155 MHz by a frequency divider circuit not shown and built in a receive data processing section 52, is sent to a first PLL circuit 71 as a second clock signal 81.
  • the first PLL circuit 71 is a filter for removing the jitter contained in the second clock signal.
  • a third clock 82 free of the jitter is sent to a second PLL circuit 72 and further to a transmission data processing section 55.
  • the first electrical signal identified at the decision block 5 is parallely converted in frequency by the demultiplexer 51 and an internal frequency dividing circuit into a second electrical signal.
  • This second electrical signal is processed at an arithmetic circuit of the processing section 52.
  • the clock signal 82 free of jitters is increased in frequency from 155 MHz up to 10 GHz by the second PLL circuit 72 (to form a clock signal 83).
  • the transmission data processing section 55 operates at a timing of the 155-MHz clock signal 84.
  • the frequency of the transmission data rate is increased up to 10 GHz by a multiplexer 56 and a frequency multipher circuit not shown and built in the processing section 55.
  • the transmission data is applied to a modulator driver 57 at a timing of the clock signal 83 by means of the D-FF 7.
  • An elastic buffer 53 arbitrates between the phase of writing data at CLOCK 81 including the jitter and the phose of readiry data at CLOCK 84 including nogitter. As a result, data are positively delivered from the receiver 90 to the transmitter 91.
  • the first PLL circuit 71 is done without.
  • the cut-off frequency fC1 of the tank circuit 62 is set to 3 MHz to 10 MHz, and the cut-off frequency fC2 of loop filter for the first PLL circuit 71 to 1 kHz.
  • the cut-off frequency of loop filter the second PLL circuit 72 could not be reduced below 3 MHz for the reason of reducing random jitter. Consequently, the first PLL circuit 71 is required.
  • the repeater 50 like the repeater 40 in Fig. 5, effectively prevents the logic error and the jitter accumulation even when a jitter is contained in the received signal.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • Optical Communication System (AREA)
  • Dc Digital Transmission (AREA)
  • Cable Transmission Systems, Equalization Of Radio And Reduction Of Echo (AREA)

Abstract

A a first clock extraction device (4') included in the receiving section of the optical regenerator recovers a receiving clock. The receiving clock follows the jitter contained in a receiving optical signal caused by fiber wavelength dispersion. The receiving optical signal is detected in synchrony with the receiving clock. A transmission section includes a transmitter (8, 9) for generating a transmission optical signal changed in phase in such a manner as to suppress the stimulated Brillouin scattering and a second clock extraction device (4'') for regenerating the transmission clock not following the jitter. The data of the receiving optical signal is processed at a processing unit (6), and intensity-modulated on the basis of the data thus processed. The timing of this modulation is synchronized with the transmission clock. The receiving clock is synchronized with the jitter, and therefore no logic error occurs. Since the transmission clock does not follow the jitter, the jitter is prevented from accumulating.

Description

    BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • The present invention relates to an optical regenerator and an optical transmission system for multi-repeater optical transmission, or more in particular to a high-quality optical transmission technique employing a measure against what is called the stimulated Brillouin scattering in order to produce a high launch power.
  • In an optical transmission system, implementation of practical optical amplifiers has made it possible to produce a high-output optical transmission signal from an optical transmitter. The power of the optical transmission signal that can be applied to an optical fiber coupled to the repeater, however, is limited by the stimulated Brillouin scattering (hereinafter referred to simply as "SBS") of the optical fiber.
  • A method for improving the power of the optical transmission signal that can be applied to the optical fiber is described in ECOC Journal, pp.657-660, (1991) by P.M. Gabla, et al.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an optical transmission system that can transmit an optical transmission signal with high power.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide an optical regenerator suitable for the optical transmission system repeated by a plurality of regenerators.
  • According to P.M. Gabla, et al., SBS can be suppressed by modulating the phase or frequency of the signal input to the optical fiber to be the phase uncontinuously. In the case where the input signal to an end of the optical fiber, i.e., the frequency of the output signal of a repeater is different, however, the time of arrival of the signal at the other end of the optical fiber is diverged due to the wavelength dispersion of the optical fiber, with the result that a jitter appears in the signal waveform at the other end.
  • Detailed description will be made with reference to Fig. 1. In Fig. 1, reference numeral 1 designates an anti-SBS transmitter including a semiconductor laser 9 as a CW light source which emits at 1.3 µm or 1.5 µm drived by a predetermined magnitude of current. Numeral 8 designates a amplitude modulator for frequency-modulating with a sinusoidal wave (several kHz to several MHz) the predetermined current applied to the semiconductor laser. As a result, the output phase or frequency of the semiconductor laser 9 is modulated, thereby generating a carrier signal which has a uncontinuous phase capable of suppressing SBS. In the process, the output amplitude of the semiconductor laser is also modulated. This amplitude modulation, however, is negligibly small. The amplitude of this carrier signal is modulated in accordance with the data signal by an external modulator 10 and makes up an optical transmission signal. When a signal with a discrete phase is applied to an optical fiber 11, the output waveform of the optical fiber contains a jitter for the reason described above. The observed frequency of the jitter coincides with the frequency of the frequency modulator 8.
  • As shown in Fig. 2, the frequency modulator 8 may be eliminated and the phase of the output of the laser 9 may be modulated directly using a phase modulator 100 to suppress the jitter.
  • Repeaters 20 and 30 which have been studied by the inventors are shown in Figs. 3A and 3B.
  • In these repeaters, a received signal containing the jitter is logically decided at edge of the clock pulse extracted from the received signal and then transmitted as an optical signal (by regeneration repeating). The modulation frequency of the anti-SBS frequency modulation is assumed to be fSBS, and the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function for a clock extraction device to be fC1. The configuration with the relation fSBS < fC1 held is shown in Fig.3A, the jitter transfer function for the clock extraction device 4' in Fig. 4A. Since the jitter frequency fSBS of the receive signal is lower than the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function, the clock phase extracted by the clock extraction device 4' follows the jitter of the data. As a consequence, the data phase coincides with the clock phase at a decision block 5, and therefore no logical error of the data is caused due to the jitter. In spite of this, the jitter on input side passes through the optical regenerator 20 and appears in a similar form in the optical intensity waveform on the output side. The frequency modulation for SBS suppression is required to be performed for each optical regenerator. After transmission through the optical fiber 11, therefore, the frequency modulation is converted into a jitter by wavelength dispersion, resulting in an increased jitter. In this way, when fSBS is smaller than fC1, the problem is that the jitter is accumulated during the multi-repeater transmission.
  • Now, the configuration for the relation fSBS > fC1 held is shown in Fig.3B, and the jitter transfer function for the clock extraction device 4'' in Fig. 4B. In view of the fact that the input jitter frequency fSBS is higher than the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function, the clock extraction device 4'' suppresses the jitter of frequency fSBS. No jitter by anti-SBS frequency modulation, therefore, appears on the output. Since the clock extracted the clock extraction device 4'' fails to follow the data jitter, therefore, an error occurs between the clock phase and the data phase at the decision block 5, which is likely to cause a logic error of the data.
  • In this regenerators, the transmission quality is deteriorated due to the jitter caused when the SBS is suppressed.
  • Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an optical regenerator and an optical transmission system in which the logical error and the jitter accumulation due to the received jitter can be obviated in the presence of jitters due to the phase or frequency modulation performed for the SBS suppression.
  • In order to achieve the above-mentioned object, there is provided according to the invention an optical regenerator in which an optical transmission signal frequency-modulated by which phase of the signal changes to suppress the SBS and further intensity-modulated by data is transmitted as an optical output, the optical regenerator having two functions of clock extraction for decision the received signal and clock regeneration for a transmission clock. In other words, as shown in Fig.5. there is provided an optical regenerator comprising a first clock extraction device 4' for decision the received signal and a second clock extraction device 4'' for regenerating the transmission clock, wherein the relation holds that fC2 < fSBS < fC1, where fSBS is the modulation frequency for frequency modulation of the optical transmission signal, fC1 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function of the first clock extraction device 4', and fC2 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function for the second clock extraction device 4''.
  • In this optical regenerator, suppose the first clock extraction device 4' and the second clock extraction device 4'' are cascaded as shown in Fig. 5. The first clock extraction device 4' follows the input and the second clock attraction device 4'' can easily suppress the jitter through the extraction devices 4'. This configuration is desirable as the jitter tolerance and the jitter transfer characteristic can be improved simultaneously.
  • Also, in order to achieve the above-mentioned objects of the invention, there is provided according to the present invention a multi-repeater optical transmission system for transmitting an optical transmission signal frequency-modulated and further intensity-modulated by data as an optical output, in which the optical transmission signal of the transmitter is frequency-modulated with frequency fSBS, a corresponding repeating receiver includes a first clock extraction device 4' for decision the received signal and a second clock extraction device 4'' for regenerating the transmission clock as a clock for transmission data, as shown in Fig. 5, and the relation is held that fC2 < fSBS < fC1 where fC1 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function for the first clock extraction device and fC2 the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function for the second clock extraction device.
  • Even when a jitter occurs in the received signal due to the frequency modulation for SBS suppression, the relation fSBS < fC1 causes the phase of the input clock to the decision block to follow the phase of the input data and therefore no error occurs. In view of the fact that the transmission clock holds the relation fC2 < fSBS, on the other hand, the frequency component of jitter for anti-SBS frequency modulation is suppressed, and therefore jitters are not added independently or accumulated at the time of multiple repeating operations. In this way, the present invention is provided to solve the two problems of jitter and the logical error due to the input jitter at the same time.
  • In the foregoing description, assume that the anti-SBS transmitter shown in Fig. 2 is used. In the case where the phase uncontinuity of the transmission signal is converted to the instantaneous frequency or in the case where the modulation by the frequency modulator 8 is not by sinusoidal wave, as shown in Figs. 4C and 4D, the instanteneous frequency corresponding to the modulation frequency fSBS has a certain bandwidth. In this case, the relations hold that fC2 < fSBSL and fSBSH < fC1, where fC1 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function of the first clock extraction device 4' and fC2 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function of the second clock extraction device 4''.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • These and other objects and technical advantages of the present invention will be readily apparent from the following description of the preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
    • Figs. 1 and 2 are schematic diagrams showing an anti-SBS transmitter and jitter generation;
    • Figs.3A and 3B are diagrams showing the configuration of a repeater studied by the inventors;
    • Figs. 4A to 4D are diagrams showing the jitter transfer characteristic of the clock extraction devices;
    • Fig. 5 is a diagram showing the configuration of an optical regenerator according to a first embodiment of the invention; and
    • Fig. 6 is a diagram showing the configuration of an optical regenerator according to a second embodiment of the invention.
    DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
  • Embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail below.
  • An example configuration of an optical regenerator according to a first embodiment is shown in Fig.5. Numeral 40 designates an optical regenerator unit, numeral 2 a photodiode, numeral 3 an equalizing amplifier, and numeral 4' a first clock extraction device. The clock extraction device, which includes such functions as nonlinear extraction, is represented by a tank circuit related to the jitter characteristic. Numeral 5 designates a decision block numeral 6 a digital signal processing section for data processing required for regenerator, numeral 7 a D-FF (D-type flip-flop), and numeral 4'' a second clock extraction device. The clock supply for driving the digital processing section 6 is not shown as it is not important in terms of configuration. The D-FF 7, which indicates that the phase (timing) of the output data is determined by the clock supplied from the clock extraction device 4'', may be included in the digital processing section 6 depending on the particular configuration. Numeral 8 designates a amplitude modulation oscillator for frequency modulation suppressing SBS, numeral 9 a semiconductor laser, and numeral 10 an external modulator.
  • First, the operation at the transmitting end will be explained. When the current supplied to the semiconductor laser 9 is modulated by an oscillator 8 of frequency fSBS in order to reduce SBS, the light spectrum of the output of the semiconductor laser is diverged. This light is modulated by data through the external modulator 10 thereby to produce an optical signal intensity-modulated according to the data.
  • Next, the operation at the receiving end will be explained. The received optical signal through dispersive optical fiber contains a jitter according to the principle shown in Fig. 1. This received optical signal is converted into a current by the photodiode 2, amplified by the equalizing amplifier 3, and then is distributed between the decision block 5 and the first clock extraction device 4'. The first clock extraction device 4', which generally includes a nonlinear extractor, for example, full-wave rectifier, a tank circuit and a limitting amplifier, may alternatively use a PLL. Provided, however, that fSBS < fC1 where fC1 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function. In the case where a tank circuit is used for the clock extraction device 4', Q1 is determined as Q1 = fB/(2fC1)
    Figure imgb0001
    , where fB is the transmission bit rate. In actual transmission systems, it is necessary that 500 < Q1 < 1500, and fSBS is required to be determined after fC1 has been determined for various reasons. The clock recoverd at the clock extraction device 4' is supplied as a timing signal for logic decision on the equalizing amplification signal to the decision block 5 on the one hand and is applied to the second clock extraction device 4" at the same time. Given the relation that fSBS < fC1, the jitter of frequency fSBS passes through the clock extraction device 4'. As a result, the clock supplied to the clock extraction device 4' follows the jitter of the equalizing amplification signal applied to the decision block 5. There occurs, therefore, no logic error of data which otherwise might be caused by the jitter generated for SBS suppression.
  • The clock extraction device 4'' is for removing the jitter of the clock recoverd at the clock extraction device 4', and includes a tank circuit alone or a PLL. The clock extraction device 4'' is input the clock including the jitter of frequency fSBS, and in order to suppress this jitter, the relation is held fC2 < fSBS. The transmission data is output syncronized with the clock regenerated at the clock extraction device 4'' using the D-FF 7. As a consequence, the jitter of frequency fSBS input to the optical repeater 40 is removed from the output. Also, no logic error of data occurs which otherwise might be caused by the jitter of frequency fSBS.
  • As will be seen from the foregoing embodiment, the object of the invention is achieved by establishing the relation fC2 < fSBS < fC1, where fSBS is the frequency-modulating frequency fSBS for SBS suppression, fC1 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function for the first clock extraction device, and fC2 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function for the second clock extraction device. The difference between fC1 and fSBS, which may be small, is preferably about one order of magnitude considering a margin. Also, the difference between fSBS and fC2 should preferably be one order of magnitude. For example, according to the embodiment under consideration, fSBS is set to 10 kHz to 1 MHz, fC1 to 3 MHz to 10 MHz, and fC2 to 1 kHz to 0.1 MHz for 10 Gb/s transmission.
  • Unlike in the aforementioned embodiment in which the first clock extraction device and the second clock extraction device are connected in cascade, parallel connection of the first and second clock extraction devices has a similar same effect. Also, according to the above-mentioned embodiment, the semi-conductor laser 9 for SBS suppression is frequency-modulated with a sinusoidal wave. A similar effect is obtained, however, by the frequency modulation with other than a sinusoidal wave or by the phase modulation instead of frequency modulation as far as fC2 is set to less than the lower limit (fSBSL) of the spectrum of the modulation signal and fC1 to more than the upper limit (fSBSH) of the spectrum of the modulation signal.
  • When a multiplicity of repeaters as described with reference to the foregoing embodiment are connected, jitters will neither accumulate nor cause a logic error. As a result, a transmission system comprising such repeaters can realize high-quality optical transmission between remote sites.
  • A repeater 50 according to another embodiment for 10 Gb/s optical regenerate is shown in Fig. 6. In Fig. 6, the component parts which perform the same operation as the corresponding parts in Fig. 5 are designated by the same reference numerals respectively and will not be fully described. A first clock extraction device 54', like the first clock extraction device 4' of Fig. 5, is for recovering the clock in order not to cause any logic error due to jitters. The first clock extraction device 54' includes a full-wave rectifier 61, a tank circuit 62 and a limitting amplifier 63. The transmission optical signal is converted into a first electrical signal at a photodiode 2, which first electrical signal is amplified at an amplifier 3 and is distributed between the first clock extraction device 54' and the decision block 5. The first clock extraction device 54' recovers the clock signal 80 (10 GHz) on the basis of the first electrical signal distributed. The clock signal 80 is divided to 1/16 in frequency by a demultiplexer 51, and after being further reduced to 155 MHz by a frequency divider circuit not shown and built in a receive data processing section 52, is sent to a first PLL circuit 71 as a second clock signal 81. The first PLL circuit 71 is a filter for removing the jitter contained in the second clock signal. A third clock 82 free of the jitter is sent to a second PLL circuit 72 and further to a transmission data processing section 55. The first electrical signal identified at the decision block 5 is parallely converted in frequency by the demultiplexer 51 and an internal frequency dividing circuit into a second electrical signal. This second electrical signal is processed at an arithmetic circuit of the processing section 52. The clock signal 82 free of jitters is increased in frequency from 155 MHz up to 10 GHz by the second PLL circuit 72 (to form a clock signal 83). The transmission data processing section 55 operates at a timing of the 155-MHz clock signal 84. The frequency of the transmission data rate is increased up to 10 GHz by a multiplexer 56 and a frequency multipher circuit not shown and built in the processing section 55. The transmission data is applied to a modulator driver 57 at a timing of the clock signal 83 by means of the D-FF 7.
  • An elastic buffer 53 arbitrates between the phase of writing data at CLOCK 81 including the jitter and the phose of readiry data at CLOCK 84 including nogitter. As a result, data are positively delivered from the receiver 90 to the transmitter 91.
  • As far as the second PLL circuit 72 is provided with the function of removing jitters, the first PLL circuit 71 is done without. According to the embodiment under consideration, the cut-off frequency fC1 of the tank circuit 62 is set to 3 MHz to 10 MHz, and the cut-off frequency fC2 of loop filter for the first PLL circuit 71 to 1 kHz. The cut-off frequency of loop filter the second PLL circuit 72 could not be reduced below 3 MHz for the reason of reducing random jitter. Consequently, the first PLL circuit 71 is required.
  • The operation of the processing sections 52 and 55 is described in U.S. Patent Application No.08/044425 filed April 7, 1993 which application is incorporated herein by reference.
  • The repeater 50 according to the present embodiment, like the repeater 40 in Fig. 5, effectively prevents the logic error and the jitter accumulation even when a jitter is contained in the received signal.

Claims (15)

  1. An optical regeneration repeater comprising: means (2, 3, 5, 6) for receiving a receiving optical signal changed in phase in such a manner as to suppress the stimulated Brillouin scattering and consequently containing a jitter, said means regenerating data;
       means (8, 9) for generating a transmission optical signal changed in phase in such a manner as to suppress the stimulated Brillouin scattering;
       means (10) for modulating and transmitting said transmission optical signal on the basis of the data regenerated;
       first clock extraction means (4') for regenerating the receiving clock for identifying the receiving optical signal from said receiving optical signal, said receiving clock following said jitter; and
       second clock extraction means (4'') for regenerating the transmission clock for giving a timing for modulating the transmission optical signal with the data regenerated, said transmission clock independing on the jitter.
  2. An optical regenerator according to Claim 1, wherein the relation holds fC2 < fSBS < fC1, where fSBS is the frequency corresponding to the phase change of the receiving optical signal, fC1 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function of the first clock extraction means, and fC2 is the cut-off frequency of the jitter transfer function of the second clock extraction means.
  3. An optical regenerator according to Claim 1, wherein said second clock extraction means (4'') recovers said transmission clock on the basis of said receiving clock.
  4. An optical regenerator according to Claim 2, wherein said fSBS has a bandwidth, and the relation holds fC2 < fSBSL and fSBSH < fC1, where fSBSH and fSBSL are the maximum value and the minimum value of the bandwidth respectively.
  5. An optical regenerator according to Claim 1, wherein said means for generating a transmission optical signal includes a semiconductor laser (9) providing a source of CW oscillation and a amplitude modulator (8) for modulating the current applied to said semiconductor laser with said frequency fSBS.
  6. An optical regenerator according to Claim 1, wherein said means for generating the transmission optical signal includes a semiconductor laser (9) providing a CW oscillation source oscillating at a predetermined frequency and a phase modulator (100) for phase-modulating the output light of said semiconductor laser.
  7. An optical regenerator according to Claim 2, wherein said first or said second clock extraction means includes a tank circuit or a PLL circuit.
  8. An optical regenerator according to Claim 7, wherein said first clock extraction means further includes a full-wave rectifier (61) and a limiting amplifier (63).
  9. An optical regenerator according to Claim 2, wherein said second clock extraction means includes at least two PLL circuits (71, 72) coupled in series.
  10. An optical regenerator according to Claim 2, further comprising means for reducing the frequency of said receiving clock and forming a third clock (81), wherein said second clock extraction means (72) regenerates said transmission clock on the basis of the third clock.
  11. A method of optical regenerating comprising the steps of:
       receiving a receiving optical signal changed in phase in such a manner as to suppress the stimulated Brillouin scattering and consequently containing a jitter, and for regenerating data from the receiving optical signal by deciding said data with the receiving clock following said jitter;
       intensity-modulating the transmission optical signal changed in phase in such a manner as to suppress the stimulate Brillouin scattering, in synchrony with the transmission clock independing on said jitter on the basis of the data regenerated.
  12. An optical regenerator comprising:
       a photoelectric converter (2) for receiving a transmission optical signal changed in phase in such a manner as to suppress the stimulated Brillouin scattering and consequently containing a jitter, and forming a first electrical signal;
       a tank circuit (4') for regenerating a receiving clock signal for identifying the first electrical signal from said first electrical signal, said receiving clock signal following said jitter;
       processing means (6) for processing the first electrical signal and forming transmission data;
       a second tank circuit (4'') regenerating a transmission clock signal on the basis of said receiving clock signal said transmission clock signal independs on said differ;
       a transmission signal generator (8, 9) for generating a transmission optical signal changed in phase in such a manner as to suppress the stimulate Brillouin scattering; and
       a modulator (7, 10) for intensity-modulating said transmission optical signal on the basis of said transmission data in synchrony with said transmission clock signal.
  13. An optical regenerator comprising:
       a photoelectric converter (2) for receiving a transmission optical signal changed in phase in such a manner as to suppress the stimulated Brillouin scattering and consequently containing a jitter, and forming a first electrical signal;
       a first clock extraction circuit (54') for regenerating a transmission clock signal for identifying the first electrical signal from said first electrical signal, said transmission clock signal following said jitter;
       means (51) for reducing the frequency of said transmission clock signal and the frequency of said first electrical signal thereby to form a second clock signal and a second electrical signal;
       first processing means (52) for processing the second electrical signal in synchrony with said second clock signal and forming a receiving data;
       a first PLL circuit (71) for removing the jitter from said second clock signal and regenerating a third clock signal;
       a second PLL circuit (72) for regenerating a transmission clock signal from said third clock signal;
       second processing means (55) for forming the transmission data from said receiving data in synchrony with said third clock signal;
       an elastic buffer (53) for synchronizing the transfer of the receiving data from said first processing means to said second processing means;
       means (56) for increasing the frequency of said transmission data;
       transmission signal generator (8, 9) for generating a transmission optical signal changed in phase in such a manner as to suppress the stimulated Brillouin scattering; and
       a modulator (7, 57, 10) for intensity-modulating the transmission optical signal on the basis of said transmission data in synchrony with said transmission clock signal.
  14. An optical transmission system comprising a plurality of optical regenerators according to any one of claims 1 to 10, 12 and 13.
  15. An optical transmission system according to Claim 14, further comprising a repeater of amplifier between said regenerators.
EP95101587A 1994-02-07 1995-02-06 An optical regenerator and an optical transmission system Expired - Lifetime EP0666658B1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP13307/94 1994-02-07
JP01330794A JP3434869B2 (en) 1994-02-07 1994-02-07 Optical regenerative repeater and optical transmission device
JP1330794 1994-02-07

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0666658A1 true EP0666658A1 (en) 1995-08-09
EP0666658B1 EP0666658B1 (en) 2002-07-10

Family

ID=11829530

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP95101587A Expired - Lifetime EP0666658B1 (en) 1994-02-07 1995-02-06 An optical regenerator and an optical transmission system

Country Status (5)

Country Link
US (2) US5576876A (en)
EP (1) EP0666658B1 (en)
JP (1) JP3434869B2 (en)
CA (1) CA2141351C (en)
DE (1) DE69527320T2 (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2305042A (en) * 1995-09-01 1997-03-26 France Telecom Reshaping optical pulses using amplitude and phase modulation
EP2141834A4 (en) * 2007-03-27 2015-07-08 Fujitsu Ltd Optical communication base station, optical signal converting apparatus and optical signal converting method

Families Citing this family (25)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE19649085A1 (en) * 1996-11-27 1998-05-28 Alsthom Cge Alcatel Transmitting / receiving device and method for transmitting broadband signals and transmitting / receiving device for receiving broadband signals
JP3443534B2 (en) * 1998-12-17 2003-09-02 日本電信電話株式会社 Atomic frequency standard laser pulse oscillator
JP2000299525A (en) * 1999-04-13 2000-10-24 Sumitomo Electric Ind Ltd Optical transmitter and optical communication system
JP3707955B2 (en) * 1999-05-10 2005-10-19 平河ヒューテック株式会社 WDM optical transmission system
US6476953B1 (en) 1999-08-18 2002-11-05 Fujitsu Network Communications, Inc. Wavelength preserving regenerator for DWDM transmission systems
US7499647B2 (en) 2000-05-22 2009-03-03 Opvista Incorporated Fully protected broadcast and select all optical network
US7120359B2 (en) 2000-05-22 2006-10-10 Opvista Incorporated Broadcast and select all optical network
US7024112B2 (en) * 2000-09-11 2006-04-04 Opvista Incorporated In-band wavelength conversion wavelength buffering and multi-protocol lambda switching
EP1389830A1 (en) * 2002-08-16 2004-02-18 Thomson Licensing S.A. Device and method for selectively demodulating ir codes
EP1396931A1 (en) * 2002-08-16 2004-03-10 Thomson Licensing S.A. Modulator and transmitter for IR codes and method
US7171116B2 (en) * 2002-09-17 2007-01-30 Lucent Technologies Inc. Provisionable keep-alive signal for physical-layer protection of an optical network
US7146110B2 (en) 2003-02-11 2006-12-05 Optium Corporation Optical transmitter with SBS suppression
WO2006002080A2 (en) 2004-06-15 2006-01-05 Opvista Incorporated Optical communication using duobinary modulation
US8139476B2 (en) 2005-10-13 2012-03-20 Vello Systems, Inc. Optical ring networks using circulating optical probe in protection switching with automatic reversion
GB0618021D0 (en) * 2006-09-11 2006-10-18 Qinetiq Ltd Optical clock
US7773883B1 (en) 2007-05-04 2010-08-10 Vello Systems, Inc. Single-fiber optical ring networks based on optical double sideband modulation
US8175458B2 (en) 2007-07-17 2012-05-08 Vello Systems, Inc. Optical ring networks having node-to-node optical communication channels for carrying data traffic
CN101364843B (en) * 2007-08-10 2012-05-23 华为技术有限公司 Method and apparatus realizing remote data transmission in passive optical network
CN101364844B (en) * 2007-08-10 2011-03-30 华为技术有限公司 Apparatus realizing remote data transmission in passive optical network
WO2009112811A1 (en) * 2008-03-10 2009-09-17 Qinetiq Limited Optical clock
CN101729154B (en) * 2008-11-03 2012-04-18 华为技术有限公司 Method, device and system for realizing LR-PON
US9054832B2 (en) 2009-12-08 2015-06-09 Treq Labs, Inc. Management, monitoring and performance optimization of optical networks
US8705741B2 (en) 2010-02-22 2014-04-22 Vello Systems, Inc. Subchannel security at the optical layer
US8542999B2 (en) 2011-02-01 2013-09-24 Vello Systems, Inc. Minimizing bandwidth narrowing penalties in a wavelength selective switch optical network
EP3507925B1 (en) 2016-08-30 2024-03-13 Finisar Corporation Bi-directional transceiver with time synchronization

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS57194653A (en) * 1981-05-27 1982-11-30 Nec Corp Reproducing repeater
EP0571134A1 (en) * 1992-05-22 1993-11-24 AT&T Corp. Optical regenerator circuit
EP0581525A1 (en) * 1992-07-31 1994-02-02 AT&T Corp. Suppression of brillouin scattering in lightwave transmission system

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2151884B (en) * 1983-12-16 1987-05-13 Standard Telephones Cables Ltd Timing extraction
JP2661438B2 (en) * 1991-09-24 1997-10-08 日本電気株式会社 Optical regeneration repeater
EP0539177B1 (en) * 1991-10-21 2002-03-13 Nec Corporation An optical transmission system

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS57194653A (en) * 1981-05-27 1982-11-30 Nec Corp Reproducing repeater
EP0571134A1 (en) * 1992-05-22 1993-11-24 AT&T Corp. Optical regenerator circuit
EP0581525A1 (en) * 1992-07-31 1994-02-02 AT&T Corp. Suppression of brillouin scattering in lightwave transmission system

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
PATENT ABSTRACTS OF JAPAN vol. 7, no. 45 (E - 160) 23 February 1983 (1983-02-23) *

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2305042A (en) * 1995-09-01 1997-03-26 France Telecom Reshaping optical pulses using amplitude and phase modulation
GB2305042B (en) * 1995-09-01 2000-02-02 France Telecom System for transmitting RZ pulses over an amplified optical line,in particular over long distances
EP2141834A4 (en) * 2007-03-27 2015-07-08 Fujitsu Ltd Optical communication base station, optical signal converting apparatus and optical signal converting method

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US5838475A (en) 1998-11-17
US5576876A (en) 1996-11-19
EP0666658B1 (en) 2002-07-10
CA2141351C (en) 1999-07-13
DE69527320D1 (en) 2002-08-14
JP3434869B2 (en) 2003-08-11
CA2141351A1 (en) 1995-08-08
JPH07221704A (en) 1995-08-18
DE69527320T2 (en) 2003-04-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP0666658B1 (en) An optical regenerator and an optical transmission system
US4980891A (en) Clocked optical regenerator and other optoelectronic functional circuits
US6744992B2 (en) Synchronous amplitude modulation for improved performance of optical transmission systems
US6587242B1 (en) Optical transmission system
US6201621B1 (en) Optical regeneration for optical-fiber transmission systems for non-soliton signals
US5444561A (en) Optical transmission apparatus
US20210345025A1 (en) Communication System Employing Optical Frame Templates
US6256130B1 (en) Method for optical transmission over a fiber optic network, and optical communication network
JPH10313277A (en) Bit rate automatic identification device, bit rate selection type timing extract device, bit rate selection type identification regenerating device, bit rate selection type optical regenerative repeater and bit rate automatic identification method
US7142787B2 (en) Optical data transmission method and its system, optical transmitter and its method, and optical switcher
EP1331745A1 (en) Apparatus and method for 3R regeneration of optical signals
EP2226953B1 (en) An optical relay system and method
US6178022B1 (en) Optical transmitter and optical receiver for optical time division multiplexing transmission
US5754325A (en) Optical regenerating circuit
US7209666B2 (en) Optical clock recovery device for recovering the clock from an optical signal
US6424443B1 (en) Optical signal resynchronization method and device
EP0438832B1 (en) Coherent optical heterodyne transmission system
JP4214224B2 (en) Optical clock extraction apparatus and optical clock extraction method
WO2024038543A1 (en) Optically modulated signal generation device and transmission module
De Jager et al. Co-modulation--A new method for high-speed data transmission
JPH01241232A (en) Optical repeater
US20030228156A1 (en) Optical signal generator and method thereof
JP2000312186A (en) Signal transmission system
JPH1127228A (en) Optical time division multiplexing communication method and device therefor
EP1344340A2 (en) Demultiplexer for high data rate signals

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PUAI Public reference made under article 153(3) epc to a published international application that has entered the european phase

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009012

AK Designated contracting states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): DE FR GB

17P Request for examination filed

Effective date: 19960201

17Q First examination report despatched

Effective date: 20000215

GRAG Despatch of communication of intention to grant

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS AGRA

GRAG Despatch of communication of intention to grant

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS AGRA

GRAH Despatch of communication of intention to grant a patent

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS IGRA

GRAH Despatch of communication of intention to grant a patent

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS IGRA

GRAA (expected) grant

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009210

AK Designated contracting states

Kind code of ref document: B1

Designated state(s): DE FR GB

REG Reference to a national code

Ref country code: GB

Ref legal event code: FG4D

REF Corresponds to:

Ref document number: 69527320

Country of ref document: DE

Date of ref document: 20020814

ET Fr: translation filed
PLBE No opposition filed within time limit

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009261

STAA Information on the status of an ep patent application or granted ep patent

Free format text: STATUS: NO OPPOSITION FILED WITHIN TIME LIMIT

26N No opposition filed

Effective date: 20030411

PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: GB

Payment date: 20070124

Year of fee payment: 13

PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: DE

Payment date: 20070305

Year of fee payment: 13

PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: FR

Payment date: 20070122

Year of fee payment: 13

GBPC Gb: european patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 20080206

REG Reference to a national code

Ref country code: FR

Ref legal event code: ST

Effective date: 20081031

PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: DE

Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES

Effective date: 20080902

PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: FR

Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES

Effective date: 20080229

PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: GB

Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES

Effective date: 20080206